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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Gladys Pak Lei ChongPublisher: Rowman & Littlefield International Imprint: Rowman & Littlefield International Dimensions: Width: 15.80cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 24.10cm Weight: 0.617kg ISBN: 9781783489879ISBN 10: 1783489871 Pages: 296 Publication Date: 15 March 2017 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of Contents1. The Productive Aspect of Power: The Art of Making an Active Chinese Subject / 2. Embodying the Nation: The Production of Gendered Chinese Subjects / 3. Young Chinese Subjects: The Making of New Model Citizens / 4. From Driving in the City to Driving the City: Moulding Taxi Drivers into Presentable Urban Subjects / 5. Temporising Space and Time / 6. The Resinification of HK Chinese Subjects: Media as End and Instrument of Government / 7. Foucault and China: Governmentality and the Subjectification of Chinese Subjects / Bibliography / IndexReviewsChinese Subjectivities and the Beijing Olympics is chock full of information and ideas about the Beijing Olympics, all based on years of fieldwork. Chong is balanced in her approach, pointing out positive and negative aspects of the Olympics experience from many perspectives. Her work illustrates the rich applicability of Foucault's theories in the modern social world, and shows how a massive global spectacle can produce a complex mix of engagement and resistance. * MCLC Resource Center * Drawing on Foucault's theories, Gladys Pak Lei Chong offers here an informed discussion of the modern Chinese state's techniques of governmentality, in particular in the production of patriotic subjects. The ramifications of her thoughtful analysis go far beyond the Beijing Olympics. -- Rey Chow, Anne Firor Scott Professor of Literature in Trinity College of Arts and Sciences, Duke University There is no shortage of research on mega events and their political aftermath. Gladys Chong's analysis of the Beijing Olympics nevertheless stands out in this field due to the breadth of her analysis - from architecture and athletes to taxi drivers - and the thoroughness of her theoretical reflection. A critical and context sensitive reading of Michel Foucault's theory of power allows for identifying the sport event as a decisive contribution to a broader 'governmentalization' of Chinese society. Thereby the book offers timely inspiration for a comparative study of global mega events and for the broader discussion on the politics of commercialized entertainment culture. -- Markus Stauff, Assistant Professor of Media Studies, University of Amsterdam This is an eminently readable book full of insights into the intricate ways in which people in China both subject to, and sometimes resist, the governmental calls on them to be ideal national subjects. Applying a Foucauldian perspective on contemporary Chinese reality, Gladys Chong gives us an in-depth and multifaceted look - through the case study of the staging of the Beijing Olympics - into the complex relationship between the state and its subject citizens in the moulding of Chineseness and what it means to be Chinese today. -- Ien Ang, Distinguished Professor of Cultural Studies, University of Western Sydney Gladys Pak Lei Chong brings an insightful Foucauldian understanding to how the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games is intimately tied to the effective state governing strategies and the process of self-directing subjectification, and how the Chinese regime nimbly manipulates the global event to earn a high level of popular support. An important merit of this engaging study based on extensive interviews and ethnographic fieldworks is to set a new point of departure for analysis of the Olympics that have been used as patriotic education and yardsticks of national strength and social progress, and to make us aware of the limits of dichotomizing the authoritarian state and its governed subjects. -- Kwai-Cheung Lo, Professor, Hong Kong Baptist University Overall, the book opens up a series of questions that go well beyond the Olympic moment, and it makes a much-welcome contribution that will be of great interest for scholars and students of Chinese and Asian studies, media and communication studies, cultural studies and political science, and more generally anyone interested in questions of power, identity and governmentality in contemporary politics. * New Books Asia * Chong's book is a highly original, informed, and eloquent examination of the Beijing Olympics, and its insights have ramifications beyond this particular event and this particular city. It is essential reading for people concerned with contemporary China, state power, and cultural politics. * China Information, Vol. 32, No. 3 * Chinese Subjectivities and the Beijing Olympics is chock full of information and ideas about the Beijing Olympics, all based on years of fieldwork. Chong is balanced in her approach, pointing out positive and negative aspects of the Olympics experience from many perspectives. Her work illustrates the rich applicability of Foucault's theories in the modern social world, and shows how a massive global spectacle can produce a complex mix of engagement and resistance. * MCLC Resource Center * Drawing on Foucault's theories, Gladys Pak Lei Chong offers here an informed discussion of the modern Chinese state's techniques of governmentality, in particular in the production of patriotic subjects. The ramifications of her thoughtful analysis go far beyond the Beijing Olympics. -- Rey Chow, Anne Firor Scott Professor of Literature in Trinity College of Arts and Sciences, Duke University There is no shortage of research on mega events and their political aftermath. Gladys Chong's analysis of the Beijing Olympics nevertheless stands out in this field due to the breadth of her analysis - from architecture and athletes to taxi drivers - and the thoroughness of her theoretical reflection. A critical and context sensitive reading of Michel Foucault's theory of power allows for identifying the sport event as a decisive contribution to a broader `governmentalization' of Chinese society. Thereby the book offers timely inspiration for a comparative study of global mega events and for the broader discussion on the politics of commercialized entertainment culture. -- Markus Stauff, Assistant Professor of Media Studies, University of Amsterdam This is an eminently readable book full of insights into the intricate ways in which people in China both subject to, and sometimes resist, the governmental calls on them to be ideal national subjects. Applying a Foucauldian perspective on contemporary Chinese reality, Gladys Chong gives us an in-depth and multifaceted look - through the case study of the staging of the Beijing Olympics - into the complex relationship between the state and its subject citizens in the moulding of Chineseness and what it means to be Chinese today. -- Ien Ang, Distinguished Professor of Cultural Studies, University of Western Sydney Gladys Pak Lei Chong brings an insightful Foucauldian understanding to how the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games is intimately tied to the effective state governing strategies and the process of self-directing subjectification, and how the Chinese regime nimbly manipulates the global event to earn a high level of popular support. An important merit of this engaging study based on extensive interviews and ethnographic fieldworks is to set a new point of departure for analysis of the Olympics that have been used as patriotic education and yardsticks of national strength and social progress, and to make us aware of the limits of dichotomizing the authoritarian state and its governed subjects. -- Kwai-Cheung Lo, Professor, Hong Kong Baptist University Overall, the book opens up a series of questions that go well beyond the Olympic moment, and it makes a much-welcome contribution that will be of great interest for scholars and students of Chinese and Asian studies, media and communication studies, cultural studies and political science, and more generally anyone interested in questions of power, identity and governmentality in contemporary politics. * New Books Asia * Drawing on Foucault's theories, Gladys Pak Lei Chong offers here an informed discussion of the modern Chinese state's techniques of governmentality, in particular in the production of patriotic subjects. The ramifications of her thoughtful analysis go far beyond the Beijing Olympics. -- Rey Chow, Anne Firor Scott Professor of Literature in Trinity College of Arts and Sciences, Duke University There is no shortage of research on mega events and their political aftermath. Gladys Chong's analysis of the Beijing Olympics nevertheless stands out in this field due to the breadth of her analysis - from architecture and athletes to taxi drivers - and the thoroughness of her theoretical reflection. A critical and context sensitive reading of Michel Foucault's theory of power allows for identifying the sport event as a decisive contribution to a broader 'governmentalization' of Chinese society. Thereby the book offers timely inspiration for a comparative study of global mega events and for the broader discussion on the politics of commercialized entertainment culture. -- Markus Stauff, Assistant Professor of Media Studies, University of Amsterdam This is an eminently readable book full of insights into the intricate ways in which people in China both subject to, and sometimes resist, the governmental calls on them to be ideal national subjects. Applying a Foucauldian perspective on contemporary Chinese reality, Gladys Chong gives us an in-depth and multifaceted look - through the case study of the staging of the Beijing Olympics - into the complex relationship between the state and its subject citizens in the moulding of Chineseness and what it means to be Chinese today. -- Ien Ang, Distinguished Professor of Cultural Studies, University of Western Sydney Gladys Pak Lei Chong brings an insightful Foucauldian understanding to how the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games is intimately tied to the effective state governing strategies and the process of self-directing subjectification, and how the Chinese regime nimbly manipulates the global event to earn a high level of popular support. An important merit of this engaging study based on extensive interviews and ethnographic fieldworks is to set a new point of departure for analysis of the Olympics that have been used as patriotic education and yardsticks of national strength and social progress, and to make us aware of the limits of dichotomizing the authoritarian state and its governed subjects. -- Kwai-Cheung Lo, Professor, Hong Kong Baptist University Author InformationGladys Pak Lei Chong is Assistant Professor of Liberal and Cultural Studies at the Department of Humanities and Creative Writing at Hong Kong Baptist University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |